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Freescale Semiconductor Confidential and Proprietary Information. Freescale and the Freescale logo are trademarks of Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. All.

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Presentation on theme: "Freescale Semiconductor Confidential and Proprietary Information. Freescale and the Freescale logo are trademarks of Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. All."— Presentation transcript:

1 Freescale Semiconductor Confidential and Proprietary Information. Freescale and the Freescale logo are trademarks of Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. All other product or service names are the property of their respective owners. © Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. 2005. TM Bernard Dugerdil EMEA Standards Coordinator Why Open Standards is needed? SOS Interop 3 ETSI, Sophia Antipolis, 20-21 February 2006

2 TM Freescale Semiconductor Confidential and Proprietary Information. Freescale and the Freescale logo are trademarks of Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. All other product or service names are the property of their respective owners. © Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. 2005. Slide 1 Ubiquitous Network Societies anytime, anywhere, by anyone and anything The customer is at the center of the network "Broadband Customer Centric" Focal point is shifting from the network to the user Network Centric to Customer Centric The customer defines and personalizes his services Single Service to multi-Services Industry is fast moving toward using networked, digital, and wireless communication technologies Single Access to Multi Access Wireless - Wireline Convergence Regional to Worldwide Sensors - RFID Networked Telecommunication Shift Paradigm Most of the worlds communication in a few years may be ID-based object-object and human-object traffic

3 TM Freescale Semiconductor Confidential and Proprietary Information. Freescale and the Freescale logo are trademarks of Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. All other product or service names are the property of their respective owners. © Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. 2005. Slide 2 ITU-T Ad Hoc IPR Group Definition of "Open Standards" http://www.itu.int//ITU-T/othergroups/ipr-adhoc/openstandards.html "Open Standards" are standards made available to the general public and are developed (or approved) and maintained via a collaborative and consensus driven process. "Open Standards" facilitate interoperability and data exchange among different products or services and are intended for widespread adoption. Other elements of "Open Standards" include, but are not limited to: Collaborative process – voluntary and market driven development (or approval) following a transparent consensus driven process that is reasonably open to all interested parties. Reasonably balanced – ensures that the process is not dominated by any one interest group. Due process - includes consideration of and response to comments by interested parties. Intellectual property rights (IPRs) – IPRs essential to implement the standard to be licensed to all applicants on a worldwide, non-discriminatory basis, either for free and under other reasonable terms and conditions or on reasonable terms and conditions (which may include monetary compensation). Negotiations are left to the parties concerned and are performed outside the SDO. Quality and level of detail – sufficient to permit the development of a variety of competing implementations of interoperable products or services. Standardized interfaces are not hidden, or controlled other than by the SDO promulgating the standard. Publicly available – easily available for implementation and use, at a reasonable price. Publication of the text of a standard by others is permitted only with the prior approval of the SDO. On-going support – maintained and supported over a long period of time

4 TM Freescale Semiconductor Confidential and Proprietary Information. Freescale and the Freescale logo are trademarks of Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. All other product or service names are the property of their respective owners. © Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. 2005. Slide 3 What Open Standards Need Good Cooperation between SDO and Fora DSL Standards & Interoperability are the results of cooperation between ETSI, ITU-T and DSL Forum. Clear Rules of Cooperation between Standardization actors Who maintain and Update Standards? Mechanism to refer to an other standards (ITU-T A5 accredited SDO/Forum) Who maintain IPR data-base? User Organization must be in the loop from the beginning Clear IPR Policy For Speech & Video, privilege Standards which define conformance at tool-level instead of codec-level


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